66518850http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w69c75sfrevised
SNAC: Social Networks and Archival Context
VIAFrevised2015-09-19machineCPF merge programMerge v2.0revised2016-08-17T22:45:37machineSNAC EAC-CPF ParserBulk ingest into SNAC Databaserevised2016-08-17T22:45:37humanSystem Service (system@localhost)created2024-03-29machineSNAC EAC-CPF SerializerSNAC Identity Constellation serialized to EAC-CPFpersonFrobenius, Leo, 1873-1938presumedFrobenius, LeopresumedFrobeniuspresumedFrobenius, Leo (Leo V.), 1873-1938presumedFrobenius, Leo, 1873-presumedフロベニウス, レオpresumedFrobenius, L.presumedFrobenius, Leo V.presumedFrobenius, Leo Viktor, 1873-1938presumedFrobenius, Leo V. 1873-1938presumedFrobenius, Leo von 1873-1938presumedFrobenius, Leo Viktor Karl August 1873-1938presumed1873-06-291938-08-09GermanAntiquitiesArchaeologyEthnologyFolkloreScientific expeditionsZimbabweSouth AfricaBotswanaSouth AfricaZimbabweGermansNew Directions Publishing Corp.Pound, Ezra, 1885-1972.Seelye, Catherine.Snyderman, George Simon, 1908-Stapelfeldt, Eleanor Pelham.Stapelfeldt, Karsten.Transition.Frobenius, Leo, 1873-1938George S. Snyderman Papers, Bulk, 1945-1985, 1758-1995Snyderman, George Simon, 1908-George S. Snyderman Papers Bulk, 1945-1985 1758-19953.0 Linear feetTrained as an anthropologist under Frank Speck at the University of Pennsylvania, the ethnohistorian George Snyderman (1908- ) spent his career studying Seneca Indian religion, history, and culture. Snyderman edited the previously unpublished diaries of Halliday Jackson and John Phillips, Quaker missionaries to the Senecas in the late 18th and early 19th century. The Snyderman Papers includes a small volume of correspondence, along with manuscripts of works by Snyderman and colleagues, and copies of primary source materials pertaining to Seneca history. Of particular interest is his correspondence with anthropologists William N. Fenton, Merle Deardorff, and Frank Speck and with his Seneca consultant Clara Redeye and her daughter, Helen Harris, and photographs of the Allegany Senecas taken by Fenton and Speck. American Philosophical SocietyPound, Ezra, 1885-1972. Papers of Ezra Pound h[manuscript], 1933-1937.Pound, Ezra, 1885-1972.England, Robert.Heartwood Books (Charlottesville, Va.),Papers of Ezra Pound h[manuscript], 1933-1937.17 items.In a series of letters to Robert England of the Oglethorpe University Press Pound discusses potential reviewers for "A draft of xxx cantos," mentioning Joseph Hergesheimer and William E. Woodward; disparages James Joyce, S[ylvia?] Beach, Oliver Sprague, incompetents in the Roosevelt administration; emphasizes the importance of understanding economic theory; praises Irving Fisher's "Stamp Scrip," Leo Frobenius, texts by William E. Woodward and Christopher Hollis; advocates the printing of affordable books written by the American founders; discusses types of printing presses and the necessity of the New Deal providing presses for writers; advises an edition of Frobenius and other translations of classics with his Guido Cavalcanti as a model. He also mentions McNair Wilson, Random House, "The New English Weekly," John Gould Fletcher, C. H. Douglas's book "Social credit," William Brockman Bankhead, orchestral music and George Anthiel. There is an additional letter to the editor of "Westminster" asking that an article be corrected and disagreeing with "Bacon". With these is "A plan for a regional printing press" by England corrected by Pound, written for submission to the Works Progress Administration. University of Virginia. LibraryPound, Ezra, 1885-1972. Letter to John Gould Fletcher [manuscript], 1930s (ca.).Pound, Ezra, 1885-1972.Fletcher, John Gould, 1886-1950Letter to John Gould Fletcher [manuscript], 1930s (ca.).1 item.Pound, Rapallo, Italy, writes to Fletcher concerning literature in the United Statres and England in the twenties. Declares the fight is "economic" and mentions C.H. Douglas, Louis Untermeyer, Henry Siedel Canby, Jean Cocteau, Leo Frobenius and Paideuma. University of Virginia. LibraryPapers of the magazine Transition, 1933-1941.Papers of the magazine Transition, 1933-1941.5 boxes (1.67 linear ft.)Papers of the magazine Transition, an avant-garde literary magazine begun in Paris in1927 by Eugène Jolas and his wife Maria Jolas.EnglishHoughton LibraryPuckett, Newbell Niles. [Newbell Niles Puckett Memorial Gift. Miscellaneous material].Puckett, Newbell Niles.Frobenius, Leo, 1873-1938.Newbell Niles Puckett Memorial Gift.Puckett Collection.[Newbell Niles Puckett Memorial Gift. Miscellaneous material]. [1920-1967]15 linear feet.Archive of noted professor of folklore from the Sociology Department of Case Western Reserve University. Cleveland Public Library, Main LibraryFrobenius, Leo, 1873-1938. Erythrea, land and times of the sacred regicide, or, Erythrea, the moon king civilization / by Leo Frobenius ; translated by Karsten and Eleanor Pelham Stapelfeldt.Frobenius, Leo, 1873-1938.Stapelfeldt, Karsten.Stapelfeldt, Eleanor Pelham.Erythrea, land and times of the sacred regicide, or, Erythrea, the moon king civilization / by Leo Frobenius ; translated by Karsten and Eleanor Pelham Stapelfeldt. [between 1931 and 1960]436 leaves ; 28 cm.American Museum of Natural HistoryFrobenius, Leo, 1873-1938. Erythrea, land and times of the sacred riguide, 1930.Frobenius, Leo, 1873-1938.Stapelfeldt, Karsten.Stapelfeldt, Eleanor Pelham.Erythrea, land and times of the sacred riguide, 1930.1 v.Manuscript of Frobenius' publication entitled "Erythrea, land and times of the sacred riguide" based on an expedition he undertook to South Africa and Zimbabwe between 1928 and 1930. He describes the legends, ceremonies, burial rites and other spiritual matters, archaeological ruins including ancient mining, and rock pictures. Translation of Frobenius' work was prepared by Karsten and Eleanor Pelham Stapelfeldt. Campbell University, Wiggins Memorial LibraryNew Directions Publishing Corp. records, ca. 1933-1997.New Directions Publishing records344 linear feet (910 boxes and 4 volumes)Records of the New Directions Publishing Corporation largely from the Norfolk, Connecticut office of the founder, James Laughlin.EnglishSpanish; CastilianSpanish; CastilianEnglishHoughton LibraryCatherine Seelye Papers., undated, 1917-1978 [bulk 1973-1976].Seelye, CatherineCatherine Seelye Papers. undated, 1917-1978 [bulk 1973-1976].Research notes, correspondence, and transcriptions for (NY: Grossman, 1975), edited by Catherine Seelye. Seelye was a librarian at the University of Connecticut, which holds the Charles Olson Papers. Her edited book reproduces notes, essays, and poems Olson wrote during his frequent visits with Ezra Pound at St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington, D.C., after Pound was declared mentally unfit to stand trial for treason in 1945. The collection includes correspondence from prominent literary figures in American poetry and the Black Mountain School. Donald Allen, Edward Dahlberg, Robert Duncan, James Laughlin, and Omar Pound are among those represented. Professional ethics in the archival and publishing fields are also addressed. Charles Olson and Ezra Pound: An Encounter at St. ElizabethsEnglishArchives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Center.